The top 10 neighbors for CNBC's Fast Money compress into a narrow band of scores — 0.98 down to 0.94 — with no single dominant pull and no sharp drop-off between positions. That flat distribution is the structural finding.
The cluster is almost entirely composed of financial media TV shows and market-data properties. Four of the top 10 neighbors are TV Shows: CNBC's Closing Bell (0.98), Squawk Box (0.97), Squawk on the Street (0.97), and Mad Money On CNBC (0.97). Jim Cramer (0.97), a TV Personality, sits in the same tier — the only non-TV-Show in the top five. The remaining five positions go to financial and business media properties: TheStreet (0.96) and MarketWatch (0.95) as Websites, CNBC Now (0.95) and CNBC Halftime Report (0.95) as a News Publisher and TV Show respectively, and Richard Branson (0.94) as the lone Professionals subcategory entry — the only neighbor with no direct financial-media identity.
The shape says this audience is defined tightly by financial television and market-data consumption, with scores so close together that no single neighbor stands apart as a primary attractor.